slapo_lastmod(5)
NAME
slapo-lastmod - Last Modification overlay
SYNOPSIS
/etc/ldap/slapd.conf
DESCRIPTION
- The lastmod overlay creates a service entry rooted at the
- suffix of the database it's stacked onto, which holds the DN, the
- modification type, the modifiersName and the modifyTimestamp of
- the last write operation performed on that database. The lastmod
- overlay cannot be used when the "lastmod" feature is disabled,
- i.e. "lastmod off" is used.
- All operations targeted at the DN of the lastmod entry are
- rejected, except reads, i.e. searches with base scope. Regular
- operations are ignored, unless they result in writing; then, in
- case of success, the lastmod entry is updated accordingly, if
- possible.
CONFIGURATION
- These slapd.conf configuration options apply to the last
- mod overlay. They must appear after the overlay directive.
- lastmod-rdnvalue <RDN value>
- Specify the value of the RDN used for the service
- entry. By default Lastmod is used.
- lastmod-enabled {yes|no}
- Specify whether the overlay must be enabled or not
- at startup. By default, the overlay is enabled; however, by
- changing the boolean value of the attribute lastmodEnabled, one
- can affect the status of the overlay. This is useful, for in
- stance, to inhibit the overlay from keeping track of large bulk
- loads or deletions.
OBJECT CLASS
- The lastmod overlay depends on the lastmod objectClass.
- The definition of that class is as follows:
( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.3.13 "NAME 'lastmod'
DESC 'OpenLDAP per-database last modification monitoring'
STRUCTURAL
SUP top
MUST ( cn $ lastmodDN $ lastmodType )
MAY ( description $ seeAlso ) )
ATTRIBUTES
- Each one of the sections below details the meaning and use
- of a particular attribute of this lastmod objectClass. Most of
- the attributes that are specific to the lastmod objectClass are
- operational, since they can logically be altered only by the DSA.
- The most notable exception is the lastmodEnabled attributeType,
- which can be altered via protocol to change the status of the
- overlay.
- lastmodEnabled
- This attribute contains a boolean flag that determines the
- status of the overlay. It can be altered via protocol by issuing
- a modify operation that replaces the value of the attribute.
( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.1.30NAME 'lastmodEnabled'
DESC 'Lastmod overlay state'
SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.7
EQUALITY booleanMatch
SINGLE-VALUE )
OPERATIONAL ATTRIBUTES
- Each one of the sections below details the meaning and use
- of a particular attribute of this lastmod objectClass. Most of
- the attributes that are specific to the lastmod objectClass are
- operational, since they can logically be altered only by the DSA.
- lastmodDN
- This attribute contains the distinguished name of the en
- try that was last modified within the naming context of a
- database.
( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.1.28NAME 'lastmodDN'
DESC 'DN of last modification'
EQUALITY distinguishedNameMatch
SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12
NO-USER-MODIFICATION
USAGE directoryOperation )- lastmodType
- This attribute contains the type of the modification that
- occurred to the last modified entry. Legal values are add,
- delete, exop, modify, modrdn and unknown. The latter should only
- be used as a fall-thru in case of unhandled request types that
- are considered equivalent to a write operation.
( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.1.29NAME 'lastmodType'
DESC 'Type of last modification'
SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15
EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
SINGLE-VALUE
NO-USER-MODIFICATION
USAGE directoryOperation )
EXAMPLES
database bdb
suffix dc=example,dc=com
overlay lastmod
lastmod-rdnvalue "Last Modification"
SEE ALSO
- "OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" (http://www.OpenL
- DAP.org/doc/admin/)
BUGS
- It is unclear whether this overlay can safely interoperate
- with other overlays. If the underlying backend does not imple
- ment entry_get/entry_release handlers, modrdn update can become
- tricky. The code needs some cleanup and more consistent error
- handling. So far, the OIDs for the schema haven't been assigned
- yet.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- This module was written in 2004 by Pierangelo Masarati in
- fulfillment of requirements from SysNet s.n.c.; this man page has
- been copied from slapo-ppolicy(5), and most of the overlays ever
- written are copied from Howard Chu's first overlays.
- OpenLDAP is developed and maintained by The OpenLDAP
- Project (http://www.openldap.org/). OpenLDAP is derived from
- University of Michigan LDAP 3.3 Release.
- OpenLDAP 2.3.30 2006/11/14